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Journal ArticleDOI

The first contact of patients with schizophrenia with psychiatric services: social factors and pathways to care in a multi-ethnic population

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TLDR
The findings suggest that reports of less desirable routes of entry for African-Caribbean patients into the psychiatric service do not apply to their first admission but are likely to develop over time and repeated contact with the services.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: African-Caribbean patients have less desirable routes of entry into the psychiatric services than other ethnic groups in Britain but this may not apply to the first contact with services. METHODS: Patients' pathways to care, type of admission or referral and sectioning details were recorded for all first contact patients presenting to south London psychiatric services over a 2-year period. We also conducted a retrospective analysis of data from the Camberwell Register, comparing rates of compulsory admission between 'Whites' and 'African-Caribbeans' for first and readmissions, over a 20-year period. RESULTS: Our first contact sample comprised 38 White, 38 African-Caribbean and 24 Asian patients with CATEGO defined broad schizophrenia. GP referral was found to be the most common mode of contact and there were no significant differences between the ethnic groups with regard to compulsory admission. Similarly, data from the Camberwell Register showed no significant difference in rates of compulsory admission between first admission White and African-Caribbean patients. However, when all readmissions were examined, African-Caribbeans were more likely to be admitted involuntarily. CONCLUSIONS: Our findings suggest that reports of less desirable routes of entry for African-Caribbean patients into the psychiatric service do not apply to their first admission but are likely to develop over time and repeated contact with the services.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Ethnic variations in pathways to and use of specialist mental health services in the UK - Systematic review

TL;DR: There is strongEvidence of variation between ethnic groups for voluntary and compulsory admissions, and some evidence of variation in pathways to specialist care.
Journal ArticleDOI

Understanding the excess of psychosis among the African-Caribbean population in England. Review of current hypotheses.

TL;DR: The excess of the two psychotic disorders are probably linked: African-Caribbean patients with schizophrenia show more affective symptoms, and a more relapsing course with greater social disruption but fewer chronic negative symptoms, than White patients.
Journal ArticleDOI

Pathways to care and ethnicity. 1: Sample characteristics and compulsory admission. Report from the AESOP study.

TL;DR: Findings suggest that factors are operating at or prior to first presentation to increase the risk of compulsory admission among African–Caribbean and Black African patients.
Journal ArticleDOI

Negative pathways to psychiatric care and ethnicity: the bridge between social science and psychiatry.

TL;DR: It is argued that the pathway to care has to be studied as a social process subject to a wide range of influences, including the cultural context within which illness is experienced, and Kleinman's Health Care System model offers a particularly valuable preliminary framework for organising and interpreting future research.
Journal ArticleDOI

Use of mental health services and subjective satisfaction with treatment among Black Caribbean immigrants: results from the National Survey of American Life.

TL;DR: The findings suggest that timing of migration and generational status of Caribbean Black immigrants and ancestry groups contribute to important differences in rates and sources of use, relative satisfaction, and perception of helpfulness, with regard to formal mental health services.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Pathways to care for patients with a first episode of psychosis : a comparison of ethnic groups

TL;DR: It may be that ethnicity becomes an important variable after the patient has come into contact with psychiatric services and the routes to psychiatric services for first onset patients are different to those for chronic patients.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ethnic differences in risk of compulsory psychiatric admission among representative cases of psychosis in London.

TL;DR: Independent of psychiatric diagnosis and sociodemographic differences, black African and black Caribbean patients with psychosis in south London were more likely than white patients to have ever been detained under the Mental Health Act 1983.
Journal ArticleDOI

Severe mental disorder in Afro-Caribbean patients: some social, demographic and service factors

TL;DR: The social geography of the two groups suggests that the high rates of schizophrenia and related psychoses that were previously reported cannot be explained simply by differences in area of residence at the time of presentation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Social deprivation and psychiatric admission rates among different diagnostic groups.

TL;DR: The association between psychiatric admission rates and measures of deprivation varies considerably with diagnosis; measures of social deprivation may indicate need for services for patients with psychotic disorders; admission rates for non-psychotic illnesses may reflect the availability of beds rather than need.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ethnicity and use of acute psychiatric beds: one-day survey in north and south Thames regions.

TL;DR: Findings demonstrate the over-representation of Black ethnic groups within current psychiatric provision and the complement of services to all minority ethnic groups should be examined in terms of access, appropriateness and quality of care.
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